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Egyptian Cinema and the Appropriation of Islamic Law in Pre-revolutionary Egypt (1945-1952)
Abstract
A quick glance at Egyptian films of pre-1952 revolution can easily lead to conclusions that modernity in Egypt is as predominately secular domain. However, a closer look at supporting roles reveals that Islam served as a substratum of the everyday life practices of film characters. This paper examines metaphors representing Islam in the cinematic critique of modernity in post WWII Egypt. I draw on selected scenes from popular family dramas such as Talaq Su‘ad Hanim (The Divorce of Su’ad Hanim, dir. Anwar Wagdi, 1948), al-Zawja al-Sabi‘a (The Seventh Wife, dir. Muhammad ‘Imara, 1950) and al-Bayt al-Kabir (The Great Household, dir. Ahmad Kamil Mursi, 1949). These films are popular classics that continue to have a visible presence in Egyptian popular culture until today. They share a critique of the false ways in which modernity materializes and leads to the appropriation of Islamic legal tradition in order to sustain a class hierarchy that thrived on colonization and war. They present a rising trajectory showing the changing images of feminine agency in response to the appropriation of Islamic personal law of divorce amidst caricatures of modernity. In doing so, I argue, these films presented a fairly early recognition of how religion has not shrunken away under the pressures of modernization. They served as an exemplar of a secular public sphere that is not anti-religion—one which accentuates the crucial difference between Islam as a faith and a body of legal knowledge that has the ‘vital semantic potentials’ to be translated into secular idioms and in a ‘universally accessible language.’ They underscored the importance of decoding the ethical intuitions of religious traditions, which could be incorporated into a ‘postsecular’ stance that finds an ally in religious sources of meaning in challenging the forces of global capitalism. More importantly, they stressed that such a task falls not only to experts and religious citizens but also to all citizens—both religious and secular—engaged in the public use of reason.
Discipline
Literature
Geographic Area
Egypt
Sub Area
19th-21st Centuries